To my knowledge There has been only one tie, and that came in the year of 1973. On May 19th, 1973, the game between the Atlanta Braves and My Los Angeles Dodgers. Their record was 95-66-1 the game ended in a 7-7 tie Wow crazy. And a pretty good record that year to boot. In that year the Designated hitter was introduced in the American League.
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In the Super Bowl era (1967-present) 68 football games have ended in a tie (including the Eagles/Bengals game this season). In total, since 1932 (considered the 1st NFL season), there have been 290* tie games, including the games played in the Super Bowl era. * - it should be noted that the old AAFC (All American Football Conference) standings/overall team records were not available on NFL.com, so the total number of tie games might be higher that the 290 I was able to account for.
The longest game, innings wise, in MLB history was in 1920 between the Brooklyn Robins and the Boston Braves. It lasted 26 innings and ended in a 1-1 tie.
The longest inning major league baseball game was between the Brooklyn Robins (Dodgers) 1, Boston Braves 1, 26 innings (game called), May 1, 1920.The most innings played in a MLB game was 26; the game was on 1920 May 1, between Brooklyn Dodgers and Boston Braves, and ended in a 1-1 tie.
If I had to take a guess I'd have to say Cleveland Browns.Well, believe it or not, the Browns made the playoffs in 2002-2003. The answer is actually a tie, as the Buffalo Bills and the Detroit Lions have not made the playoffs since the 1999-2000 season. The Houston Texans have never made the playoffs, but they only began play in 2002.
Yes, the Philadelphia Eagles and Cincinnati Bengals played the last tie in the NFL regular season (November 16, 2008 - the game ended at 13-13).
Damon and Teixeira have hit back-to-back home runs 6 times this season, tying a Major League record last set in 2004, while setting a new franchise mark for the Bombers. The Major League record is six back-to-back homers, last achieved by David Ortiz and Manny Ramirez with the 2004 Red Sox. It was also done by the Tigers' Hank Greenberg and Rudy York in 1938, and the White Sox's Magglio Ordonez and Frank Thomas in 2000. According to the Elias Sports Bureau, Damon and Teixeira's tandem showing snapped a tie for five with Lou Gehrig and Babe Ruth (1927), Gehrig and Joe DiMaggio (1936), and Gary Sheffield and Alex Rodriguez (2005).